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Access to Academic Theses and

Dissertations

Amy Wood

Director of Technical Services, CRL

&

Marie Waltz

Special Projects Librarian, CRL

Feb. 24, 2010

CRL – the beginning

CRL’s Founding Members

Dissertation Collection

800,000 dissertations

Core from original

members’ deposits

Core expanded through

exchange and deposit

programs

Demand purchase

program

Dissertation dates

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

100000

120000

14000016

00-1

609

1620

-162

9

1640

-164

9

1660

-166

9

1680

-168

9

1700

-170

9

1720

-172

9

1740

-174

9

1760

-176

9

1780

-178

9

1800

-180

9

1820

-182

9

1840

-184

9

1860

-186

9

1880

-188

9

1900

-190

9

1920

-192

9

1940

-194

9

1960

-196

9

1980

-198

9

2000

-200

9

Oldest Dissertation at

CRL

CRL Dissertations - Languages

German, 536,042, 67%

French, 136,238, 17%

English, 73,626, 9%

Dutch, 15,745, 2%

Latin, 9,333, 1%

Swedish, 8,041, 1%

Russian, 4,788, 1%

Spanish, 3,671, 1%

Other, 10,063, 1%

Access to the Collection

http://www-apps.crl.edu/catalog/dissertationSearch.asp

CRL Catalog

Dissertation Scope

Features:•Special browse by Country

and Awarding Institution

•Traditional keyword, author,

title and other searching and

browsing capabilities

•Advanced searching and limits

Digital Access to the Collection

Digital access begun in 2007

Digitized over 2,700 dissertations

120 dissertations by nobel laureates

and numerous titles by notable

scholars

Most used after

digitization – 69 times

Most circulated – 16 times

Improved Access through Digitization

EThOS

For the User

Features:•Single point of access to UK

dissertations

•Allows individuals to

download or obtain copies

unmediated

•Cost of digitization paid by

awarding institution or first

requestor

•Downloading is free

•Value added services at a cost

http://ethos.bl.uk/Home.do

CRL workflow for EThOS dissertations

Ensuring Author

Rights

The rest of the world

Check institution’s library catalog to verify dissertation

Check to see if dissertation is online through catalog or

institutional repository

Check to see if dissertation is online in regional or national

repository or through national library

Check institution’s library web site for information on

obtaining a copy of dissertation (usually through document

supply or department that handles reproductions

Do web search to see if dissertation is online or to find

author’s email to request a copy directly from the author

Institutional Repositories

University of Helsinki

http://ethesis.helsinki.fi/en

University of Pretoria

http://upetd.up.ac.za/UPe

TD.htm

National Efforts

Australasian Digital Theses Program

http://adt.caul.edu.au/

DissOnline

http://www.dissonline.de/index.htm

EThOS

http://ethos.bl.uk

National Librarieshttp://www.nationallibraries.org

Going Beyond

OpenDOAR – Directory of Open Access Repositories

http://www.opendoar.org/index.html

ROAR – Registry of Open Access Repositories

http://roar.eprints.org/

NDLTD – Networked Digital Library of Theses and

Dissertations

http://www.ndltd.org/

Going Beyond – OpenDOAR

The Directory of Open Access Repositories

• Bridge between repository and service provider

• identify the contents of each repository

• create a list of repositories of interest

• maintain the list for currency and accuracy

• harvest the metadata and full-text re-use policies individually

• analyse the policies to check for data-mining/commercial re-use etc

• exclude those repositories without the correct rights policies

• Enable searches of content with custom Google search or with ROAR API

• http://www.opendoar.org/tools/index.html

http://www.opendoar.org/documents/beyond_the_list.html

Going Beyond – ROAR

Registry of Open Access Repositories

Offers ROARmap - (Registry of Open Access Repository Material Archiving

Policies)

Universities and research institutions who have adopted a mandate to provide open access to

their own peer-reviewed research output are invited to register and describe their policy in

ROARMAP.

Typical entry user sees

– Running DiVA, based in Sweden and is registered as Research Institutional or

Departmental

Registered on 2005-12-08

Cumulative deposits: 1471 total [table] [graph]

Daily deposits in last year: 51 days of 1-9, 3 days of 10-99, 0 days of 100+ [table] [graph

(PNG format)] [interactive graph (requires SVG format support)]

OAI Interface: Identify List Metadata Formats List Sets [harvest status]

100% freely accessible fulltext (* estimate)

Going Beyond – NDLTD

Networked Digital Library of Theses and

Dissertations

“international organization dedicated to promoting the adoption, creation,

use, dissemination and preservation of electronic analogues to the

traditional paper-based theses and dissertations”

Guide for electronic theses and dissertations

http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/ETD_Guide

Search content of union archive with VTLS

http://thumper.vtls.com:6080/visualizer/

Information about research and experimental services and community

activities

http://www.ndltd.org

Questions?

ProQuest

A Case Study of A Digital

Repository

What is a Digital Repository?

Services

Administration

Digital Content

Trusted Repository Audit Checklist (TRAC)

TRAC criteria looks at:

1. Repository Management (Administration)

2. Data Management (Content, services)

3. Technology & Security

...For the purpose of certification and auditing digital repositories.

We hope TRAC may become an ISO

standard soon, like OAIS

National Science Foundation Grant

NSF awarded CRL a grant to study eight long-lived

data repositories.

Eight Repositories

The Arabidopsis Information

Resource (TAIR)

Chemical Abstracts Service

(CAS)

National Center for

Atmospheric Research: Earth

Observing Laboratories

(NCAR/EOL)

Sloan Digital Sky Survey

U.S. Geological Survey

(EROS)

National Opinion Research

Center (NORC) General

Social Survey (GSS)

UMI Dissertations Publishing

Associated Press (AP)

What is a Case Study?

An in-depth exploration of one particular case (situation or

subject) for the purpose of gaining depth of understanding

into the issues being investigated.

- ReCAPP Research Glossary

Key decisions

Practices developed

Legal obligations

Community expectations & needs

Interoperability/Data integration

Incentives for acquiring content

Our Case Studies look at:

Why did we look at ProQuest

dissertations?

A unique long-lived digital collection

Primary sources are important to CRL’s members

An official repository for dissertations as designated by the

Library of Congress and the National Library of Canada

History of UMI/ProQuest

1938 - Eugene Power starts UMI “Edition of one”

1951 - ARL endorsement

1962 - Xerox buys UMI

1985 - Bell & Howell buys UMI

2001 - PQE stock sold on NYSE

2005 - NAPC formed with microfilm assets

2006 - Cambridge Info. Grp (CIG) buys ProQuest

2009 - NAPC sells dissertation microfilm back to ProQuest

Authors

Universities

Libraries

Researchers

Library of Congress

National Library of Canada

Database producers/vendors

Who is UMI’s Designated Community?

What are their needs?

What services does UMI offer for its

dissertations?

A searchable dissertations

interface

Full-text dissertations

Easy citations

Many channels for

distribution & purchase of

dissertations

Open Access

Author copyright and

embargo services

A persistent digital archive

for dissertations

Ph.D. Verification

Sources of Income for UMI from

dissertations

Subscriptions (mainly libraries)

Dissertation Sales (mainly researchers)

Authors’ payments (one time payment)

Workflow

Confidential 1

Dissertation Publishing Process Flow

Paper and Electronic Dissertations

Received

Unpack and sort dissertations,

check for completeness and apply

tracking barcode

Key metadata into

production workflow

system (Exodus)

Books printed and

bound by vendor

Scan paper

dissertations per

requirements

FTP Print Book to

print vendor

PQDD &

PQDT

Pro

Qu

est

Sca

n V

en

do

r

Prin

t In

de

x V

end

or

Loading system (EIR)

automatically merges

metadata with images

and loads database

Scan Abstract, OCR,

add SGML tag and

index terms..

Prepare Print Index indexes

for DAI, MAI, ADD and CDI

Pack and ship

Dissertations to

scan vendor

Upload index and abstract

records to PQDD and PQDT

PDF wrapper

assembles TIFF

scans in PDF.

Products:

• ProQuest Dissertations and Theses

(PQDT)

• Print Dissertation Indexes

• CD-ROM Dissertation Index

• Print on Demand Dissertations

High Resolution

Repository

Books printed and bound by

vendor

Books Shipped to Customer

Prin

t B

ook V

en

do

r

Ship Confirm Returned to PQ

QC for missing

pages

If Native

PDF

If Paper

Preservation Strategies

Two copies of microform

stored in climate & humidity

controlled vaults

TIFF’s and PDF’s in the

online electronic vaults

Daily backups

Offsite digital storage

Logs of retrieval failures

Successful Strategies

“Edition of One” was a good idea at the time and continues to

be one.

The distributed cost model works

Collaborations have been important: ARL, LC, NLC, etc.

Uniformity of the product.

Good relations with academic community

Incentives for the designated communities

Google Dissertations and Stanford

Electronic submission will reduce

time and expense for authors

Stanford Libraries will provide a

persistent, stable URL to

dissertations in perpetuity

Makes it available in Google

Scholar, versus Google's more

generic index.

Stanford Continues :

To Catalog dissertations in

their online library catalog

To archive the file's in the

Stanford Digital Repository

Is this a threat to UMI?

1. Stanford will continue to allow students the option of submitting to ProQuest.

2. ProQuest is on the verge of signing a deal to put their dissertations into Google Book Search (not Google Scholar).

3. Universities want to maximize the dissemination and discovery of dissertations and putting them in Google book search helps widen the audience for dissertations.

Vulnerabilities

Self-publishing/Open access

More complexity content (larger size, more formats)

Dissertations’ low market value

UMI’s Preservation planning is not transparent, so we aren’t certain if it will work should there be a need.

Questions?

CRL Contacts

Amy Wood, Director of Technical Services, awood@crl.edu

Marie Waltz, Special Projects Librarian, mwaltz@crl.edu

Thank you for joining us today

Please take a few moments to fill out our followup survey:

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/XPT5NQN

You can access this PowerPoint presentation here:

http://www.crl.edu/events/6519/follow-material

You will also receive a followup e-mail with this information.

Upcoming CRL Webinars

CRL Access and Collections Webinar

Wednesday, April 14, 2010, from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. CDT. This no-cost event provides staff and faculty at CRL libraries with a great overview on

CRL collections, services, and programs.

61st Annual Meeting CRL Council of Voting Members

Collections Forum

Friday, April 23, 2010, from 1:30 to 4 p.m. CDTFor the first time, CRL will open its Annual Meeting to all representatives of CRL

libraries for a special afternoon collections forum, with a focus on print and digital

repositories and access to humanities and social science databases.

For more information, visit www.crl.edu

To sign up for our online mailing list, visit www.crl.edu/connect

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